Public Transport | Planning Permit | Business | Property Sold Price
  
Albert Park Median Price
House$2,267,600
Unit$740,600
The House price is 11% lower than last year.
Surrounding suburbs
Melbourne$590,000
Port Melbourne$1,603,000
South Melbourne$1,638,200
St Kilda$1,605,200
St Kilda West$3,302,400
Albert Park Median Rent
House$998
Unit$756
The House rent is 2% lower than last year.
Albert Park property sold price
Albert Park 3206 Profile
A1-99 ST VINCENT PLACE SOUTH and 2-94 ST VINCENT PLACE NORTH and ST VINCENT GARDENS EAST and ST VINCENT GARDENS WEST and 10 MERTON STREET and MONTAGUE STREET (PART), Albert Park
Planning History:
Registered as Victorian heritage
Last updated on - May 12, 1999
What is significant?
The St Vincent Place precinct was first designed in 1854 or 1855, probably by Andrew Clarke, the Surveyor-General of Victoria. The current layout is the work of Clement Hodgkinson, the noted surveyor, engineer and topographer, who adapted the design in 1857 to allow for its intersection by the St Kilda railway. The precinct, which in its original configuration extended from Park Street in the north to Bridport Street in the south, and from Howe Crescent in the east to Nelson Road and Cardigan Street in the west, was designed to emulate similar 'square' developments in London, although on a grander scale. The main streets were named after British naval heroes. The development of the special character of St Vincent Place has been characterised, since the first land sales in the 1860s, by a variety of housing stock which has included quality row and detached houses dominated by Rochester Terrace (Heritage Register Number 813), and by the gardens which, although they have been continuously developed, remain faithful to the initial landscape concept.
How is it significant?
The St Vincent Place Precinct is of aesthetic, historical, architectural and social significance to the State of Victoria.
Why is it significant?
The St Vincent Place Precinct is aesthetically important for the outstanding quality of its urban landscape. The major elements that reflect this importance are the gardens with their gardenesque style layout and fine collections of mature specimen trees, and the harmonious relationship of the gardens with the residential buildings facing them around St Vincent Place.
The St Vincent Place Precinct is historically important as the premier 'square' development in Victoria based on similar models in London. It is significant as the largest development of its type in Victoria and for its unusual development as gardens rather than the more usual small park as at, for example Macarthur, Murchison, Lincoln and Argyle Squares in Carlton. The precinct is also historically significant for its associations with Surveyor General Andrew Clarke, and more particularly with Clement Hodgkinson, a prolific and influential surveyor engineer in early Melbourne.
The St Vincent Place Precinct is architecturally important for the consistent quality of its built form and its high degree of intactness from its earliest phase of development, characterised by a mixture of one and two storey terraces and detached houses.
The St Vincent Place Precinct is socially important as a reflection of the aspirations of middle class residents in South Melbourne. Because of the shared outlook on and use of the gardens, the precinct has developed a sense of community cohesion unusual in the Melbourne context. The gardens are also socially important a
Nearby Public Transport:
Stop nameTypeDistance
85 Franklin St (Adelaide CityBus14243.2 km
Summit Rd/South Eastern Fwy (CrafersBus14246.9 km
Opposite Cornerstone College/Adelaide Rd (Mount BarkerBus14254.6 km
Information Centre/South Tce (Murray BridgeBus14283 km
Shell Roadhouse/North Tce (Tailem BendBus14288.2 km
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The planning permit data is from the public websites.

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